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CUTTING EDGE ESTATE PLANNING TECHNIQUES: WHAT HAVE I LEARNED FROM MY COLLEAGUES?

By

Diana S.C. Zeydel Greenberg Traurig, P.A.

333 S.E. 2nd Avenue

Miami, Florida 33131 (305) 579-0575 zeydeld@gtlaw.com

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I. INSTALLMENT SALES TO GRANTOR TRUSTS WITH A TWIST ... 1

A. General Tax Principles Applicable to Installment Sales to Grantor Trusts ... 1

B. Is it Possible to Make the Installment Sale to Trust Created by the Spouse? ... 13

C. Using Nonrecourse Debt to Avoid the Potential Gain Realization Issues ... 18

II. 99-YEAR GRAT ... 23

A. Basic Structure of a GRAT. ... 23

B. Important Questions About GRATs Remain. ... 23

C. Enter the 99-Year GRAT ... 27

III. LEVERAGED GRATS ... 28

A. Use of Family Partnership and GRAT, But Inverted ... 28

B. Risks in the Strategy? ... 29

IV. SUPERCHARGED CREDIT SHELTER TRUSTSM ... 29

A. Testamentary Credit Shelter Trusts. ... 29

B. Making the Credit Shelter Trust a Grantor Trust ... 29

V. SPLIT PURCHASE TRUSTSSM ... 33

A. Basic Structure ... 33

B. Joint Purchase Through Personal Residence Trust ... 34

VI. TESTAMENTARY CLATS ... 37

A. The Transaction ... 37

B. The Results... 43

VII. TURNER AND PROTECTING FLPS FROM ESTATE TAX INCLUSION ... 44

A. The Turner Estate Tax Inclusion Problem ... 44

B. Attempt to Qualify for a Marital Deduction ... 44

C. Avoiding the Application of Section 2036. ... 45

D. If All Else Fails – Qualifying the Included Property for a Marital Deduction .... 46

E. Can the Included Partnership Assets Qualify for a Marital Deduction Without a Redemption? ... 48

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CUTTING EDGE ESTATE PLANNING TECHNIQUES: WHAT HAVE I LEARNED FROM MY COLLEAGUES?1

By

Diana S.C. Zeydel Greenberg Traurig, P.A.

333 S.E. 2nd Avenue

Miami, Florida 33131 (305) 579-0575 zeydeld@gtlaw.com

I. INSTALLMENT SALES TO GRANTOR TRUSTS WITH A TWIST2

A. General Tax Principles Applicable to Installment Sales to Grantor Trusts

1. Does Either or Both of Sections 2701 or 2702 Apply to an Installment Sale to a Grantor Trust?

Essentially, under both §§ 2701 and 2702,3 certain interests in a partnership,

corporation or trust owned or retained by a transferor are treated as having no value thereby causing the entire amount involved in the transfer to or acquisition by members of the transferor’s family to be treated as a gift. If either section applies to an installment sale, the result would be adverse. In the Tax Court case involving taxpayer Sharon Karmazin, Docket No. 2127-03, the IRS took the position that both §§ 2701 and 2702 may apply to an installment sale—essentially, because, in the IRS’s view, the note received in the sale did not constitute debt for purposes of those sections. That case was settled with the IRS and, according to taxpayer’s counsel, on grounds other than that either section applied. As long as the note, in fact, represents

debt, it seems, as is discussed below, that neither section should apply.4

2. Are the Trust Assets Included in the Grantor’s Estate If the Grantor Dies While the Note Is Outstanding?

It is at least strongly arguable that, in general, property sold on the installment basis is not included in the seller’s gross estate because the seller has not retained an interest in the property sold, but has received only the buyer’s promise to pay for the property as evidenced

by the note.5 The value of the buyer’s note would be included in the seller’s gross estate.

1

This outline consists entirely of materials excerpted from articles and outlines written by the author with other co-authors or written entirely by others. The author wishes to thank Turney Berry, Jonathan Blattmachr, Stacy Eastland, Mitchell Gans, Carlyn McCaffrey and Donald Tescher for the ideas that contributed to the content of this paper. The author has given attribution to the individuals the author believes are primary responsible for creating the strategies discussed in this outline. The development of a strategy is frequently the result of collaborative efforts, and the author acknowledges that others may have also made substantial contributions to their development. 2

Excerpted in part from J. Blattmachr & D. Zeydel, “GRATs vs. Installment Sales to IDGTs: Which Is the Panacea or Are They Both Pandemics?,” 41st Annual Heckerling Institute on Estate Planning, 2007.

3

All references to a section or § of the Code or IRC are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the all references to the regulations are to the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder.

4

See generally, R. Keebler & P. Melcher, “Structuring IDGT Sales to Avoid Section 2701, 2702, and 2036,” 32 Est. Plan. 19 (Oct. 2005).

5

See Moss v. Comm’r, 74 T.C. 1239 (1980); Cain v. Comm’r, 37 T.C. 185 (1961) (both involving so-called self-canceling installment notes). A similar rule applies in the case of a transfer of property in exchange for a private annuity. See Rev. Rul. 77-193, 1977-1 C.B. 273. The basic test was set forth in Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Smith, 356 U.S. 274 (1958), which holds that where a decedent has transferred property to another in return for a promise to make periodic payments for the decedent’s lifetime, the payments are not income from the transferred

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However, in the case of an installment sale of property to a trust created by the seller which will continue to hold the property and the earnings thereon (together with any assets initially contributed by the seller), the trust’s potential inability to satisfy the note other than with the property itself or the return thereon might support the argument that the seller has retained an interest in the property sold. The seller’s retained interest would cause estate tax inclusion under § 2036.

For purposes of § 2036, as well as §§ 2701 and 2702, the critical question would appear to be whether the debt is bona fide. If it is, the seller should not be viewed as having retained an interest in the transferred property, which should preclude the IRS from

invoking any of those sections. Indeed, the IRS appears to concede as much in PLR 9515039.6

That ruling focused on the resources available to the obligor with which to make payments on the note, finding no retained interest where the daughter/obligor had sufficient wealth but reaching a contrary conclusion where the trustee/obligor had no other assets. It would seem, therefore, that if the obligor (or guarantor) has sufficient independent wealth or, in the case of a

trust, the trustee has other assets, the note ought to be respected as a bona fide one.7 Moreover, if

the asset subject to the installment sale and its anticipated total return are sufficient to satisfy the obligation on the note, the note should not fail as debt. Rather, if the trust is reasonably expected to be able to satisfy the note by making all payments when due, even if those payments must be made from the asset purchased and the total return thereon, the note obligation should be viewed

as debt and not equity.8

The IRS has issued several private letter rulings and technical advice memoranda which, it seems, bear on this issue of possible gross estate inclusion. In the earliest such ruling, TAM 9251004, the donor transferred stock to a trust for the benefit of his grandchildren in exchange for a 15-year note bearing current interest with all principal due upon maturity. Because the value of the stock exceeded the value of the note, the donor intentionally made a part sale/part gift to the trust. The TAM states that, because the trust had no other assets, it must use the dividends on the stock to make interest payments on the note. The TAM characterizes this as a “priority right to the trust income,” and also notes that although the trustee was not prohibited from disposing of the stock, “the overall plan as established by the tenor of the trust is that the trust will retain the closely held shares for family control purposes.” The TAM concludes that under the circumstances the donor made a transfer with a retained life estate under § 2036.

This TAM in the view of some is poorly reasoned and, perhaps, may be distinguished because the transfer was simultaneously donative in part. Moreover, subsequently, in PLR 9639012, the IRS appeared to adopt a somewhat different view. In PLR 9639012, the

donors established qualified subchapter S trusts (“QSSTs”)9 for their children, and then partly

sold and partly gifted nonvoting stock to the trusts. Apparently, dividends would be used first to pay interest and principal with respect to the stock purchase, with the full price to be paid within

three years.10 The IRS ruled that the agreement to use cash dividends to pay interest and

property so as to cause inclusion of that property in the decedent’s estate, if the payments are (i) a personal obligation of the buyer, (ii) not chargeable to the transferred property, and (iii) not measured by the income from the transferred property.

6

Under § 6110(k)(3) neither a private letter ruling nor a technical advice memorandum may be cited or used as precedent.

7

Cf. Estate of Costanza v. Comm’r, 320 F.3d 595 (6th Cir. 2003) (analyzing whether the note was bona fide in the gift tax context).

8

Bootstrap sales have long been upheld by the courts, despite IRS challenges asserting that they represent another relationship. See Comm’r v. Brown, 380 U.S. 563 (1965); Mayerson v. Comm’r, 47 T.C. 340 (1966), acq. 1969-2 C.B. 23.

9

IRC § 1361(d). 10

The facts are somewhat complex, because the donors had previously purchased voting stock of the corporation from a third party and then distributed the nonvoting stock as a dividend with respect to that voting stock, and from

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principal on the note would not be considered a transfer or assignment of the income interest of the QSST beneficiaries, or cause them to fail to qualify as QSSTs, and also ruled that no part of the trust would be included in the donor-sellers’ estates.

In PLR 9535026, a donor contributed assets to a trust, and then sold stock to the trust in exchange for a 20-year note bearing current interest at the AFR under § 7872, with all principal payable at maturity. The note was secured by the stock sold. The PLR does not recite that there was any request by the taxpayer for a ruling with respect to inclusion in the estate under § 2036. However, the PLR did hold that if the fair market value of the stock equals the principal amount of the note, the sale would not result in a gift. This conclusion is stated to be “conditioned on the satisfaction of both of the following assumptions: (i) no facts are presented that would indicate that the note will not be paid according to its terms, and (ii) the [trust’s]

ability to pay the notes is not otherwise in doubt.”11 In addition, the PLR concludes that the note

would not be an “applicable retained interest” under § 2701 (and, therefore, the section will not apply), and that § 2702 would not apply because the note would be debt, rather than a term interest. Although both § 2701 and § 2702 are gift tax provisions, these rulings (particularly the ruling under § 2702, which section deals with valuation of transfers in trust to or for the benefit of family members when interests in the transferred property are retained) would seem analogous to any reasoning under § 2036 for estate tax purposes. This conclusion was, however, stated to be “void if the promissory notes are subsequently determined to be equity or not debt. We express no opinion about whether the notes are debt or equity because that determination is

primarily one of fact.”12 Interestingly, the trusts were self-settled, discretionary trusts. The

ruling does not analyze the potential estate and gift tax consequences of that fact.

The IRS has also issued rulings involving what may be viewed somewhat analogous situations, wherein property is transferred to a trust in exchange for payments for life (an annuity). In PLR 9644053, a husband and wife owned as community property stock of a corporation which, in turn, owned a partnership interest. As part of a property settlement incident to divorce, the wife was to receive the stock and was to make annuity payments to a trust for the husband’s benefit for the husband’s lifetime. The PLR states that “it appears that the amount of the annual payments to [husband] under the annuity agreement and the obligation of [wife] to make the annual payments are independent of the value of the stock or the income generated by the stock although the taxpayer agrees that the source of the annuity payments will be the payments of partnership profits to [corporation]. In order to prevent the immediate dissolution of the partnership to effect the property settlement, the payments to [husband] are secured by the guarantee of [partnership] . . . . Default by [wife] may only indirectly result in the sale of [corporation] stock by [wife]. Thus, it appears that [husband] has not retained any control over the stock . . . and that the transfer of property and property interests between [husband] and [wife] will be a bona fide exchange for full and adequate consideration.” However, the PLR concludes that whether § 2036 applies can best be determined upon consideration of the facts as they exist at the transferor’s death, and so did not rule on that issue.

In PLR 9515039, the taxpayer entered into what purported to be a split purchase with a trust, with the taxpayer acquiring a life estate and the trust acquiring the reminder interest in a general partnership interest. The PLR first recharacterizes the transaction as a transfer of property to the trust in exchange for the right to receive a lifetime annuity. The PLR reaches this conclusion under § 2702 which the ruling concludes applies whenever two or more members of the same family acquire interests in the same property with respect to which there are one or more term interests. The PLR then concludes that because the trust held no

the facts it is not clear whether the interest and principal payments referred to were being made to the donors or directly to the third party.

11

The practitioners who submitted the ruling have advised that the IRS also required that the trust have other assets of at least 10% of the value of the assets sold as a condition to the issuance of the ruling.

12

Cf. PLR 9436006, involving an installment sale of partnership units and marketable securities to a trust in exchange for a 35-year note with interest at the AFR. The IRS ruled, without further caveats, that §§ 2701 and 2702 would not apply because the seller would hold debt.

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assets other than the remainder interest, not only did the annuity interest retained by the taxpayer fail as a qualified annuity interest, but, “the obligation to make the payments is satisfiable solely out of the underlying property and its earnings. Thus, the interest retained by [taxpayer] under the agreement, being limited to the earnings and cash flow of Venture [the investment held by the family entity subject to the joint purchase] will cause inclusion of the value represented by the [trust’s] interest to be includible in [taxpayer’s] gross estate under section 2036 (reduced, pursuant to section 2043, by the amount of consideration furnished by [the trust] at the time of

the purchase).”13

There seems to be little case law addressing the gift and estate tax effects of an installment sale to a trust. However, in a series of cases which involved what might be

viewed as a somewhat analogous issue under the income tax law,14 the United States Court of

Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (the “Ninth Circuit”) has repeatedly taken the position that the transactions were properly characterized as sales in exchange for annuities rather than transfers with retained interests in trusts, except in one case where the annuity payments were directly tied

to the trust income.15 The Ninth Circuit relied on the fact that any trust property (not just the

income) could be used to pay the annuity, the transaction was properly documented as a sale, and

the taxpayer/seller did not continue to control the property after the sale to the trust.16 In Fabric

v. Commissioner,17 a case which was appealable to the Ninth Circuit, the Tax Court (albeit with

13

This may be compared with the conclusion in PLR 9515039 that a transfer of assets by the taxpayer to her daughter in exchange for a lifetime annuity would not cause inclusion of the transferred property in the taxpayer’s estate because the daughter held sufficient personal wealth to satisfy her potential liability for payments to the taxpayer, and neither the size of the payments nor the obligation to make those payments related to the performance of the underlying property. See Rev. Rul. 77-193, 1977-1 C.B. 273 (payments will not represent a retained interest in the transferred property causing estate tax inclusion under § 2036 so long as the obligation is a personal obligation, the obligation is not satisfiable solely out of the underlying property and its earnings, and the size of the payments is not determined by the size of the actual income from the underlying property at the time the payments are made).

14

In those cases, taxpayers transferred property to trusts in exchange for annuity payments for life, which they claimed were taxable under the special rules of IRC § 72 relating to annuities; the Service contended that the transactions were not, in fact, sales in exchange for annuities, but rather were transfers with retained interests resulting in grantor trust status for income tax purposes.

15

In Lazarus v. Comm’r, 58 T.C. 854 (1972), aff’d, 513 F.2d 824 (9th Cir. 1975), the court held that the taxpayer made a transfer with a retained interest based largely on the fact that the trust immediately sold the transferred stock for a note the income of which matched exactly the payments due to the grantor and, because it was non-negotiable, the income from which represented the only possible source of payment. The Ninth Circuit also cited the fact that the arrangement did not give taxpayer a down payment, interest on the deferred purchase price or security for its payment as indicative of a transfer in trust rather than a bona fide sale. However, in subsequent cases the court repeatedly distinguished Lazarus (and reversed the Tax Court) to reach the opposite result. See, e.g., Stern v. Comm’r, 747 F.2d 555 (9th Cir. 1984); La Fargue v. Comm’r, 689 F.2d 845 (9th Cir. 1982). For example, in La Fargue, the taxpayer transferred $100 to a trust and a few days later transferred property worth $335,000 to the trustees in exchange for a lifetime annuity of $16,502. While noting that, as in Lazarus, the transferred property constituted the “bulk” of the trust assets, the court held there was a valid sale because there was no “tie in” between the income of the trust and the amount of the annuity. But see Melnik v. Comm’r, T.C. Memo. 2006-25, 91 T.C.M. 741 (sale of stock to foreign company owned by foreign trusts in exchange for private annuities treated as a sham lacking business purpose where taxpayers were unable to document chronology of establishing the structure and subsequently borrowed funds from the corporation and defaulted on the notes, although accuracy-related penalties under § 6664 were abated based on taxpayers’ reasonable reliance on the advice of counsel).

16

The Tax Court has been particularly attentive to this control issue in applying the La Fargue rationale to subsequent cases. See, e.g., Weigl v. Comm’r, 84 T.C. 1192 (1985); Benson v. Comm’r, 80 T.C. 789 (1983). See also Samuel v. Comm’r, 306 F.2d 682 (1st Cir. 1962).

17

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expressed reluctance) applied the analysis of the foregoing cases in the estate tax context under § 2036, observing that “the rationale of these cases is fully applicable to the case at bar.”

In Moss v. Commissioner,18 the decedent sold his stock in his closely held

company to the company in return for an installment note that would be canceled upon his death, and the note was secured by a stock pledge executed by the other shareholders. The Tax Court observed that “[e]ven should we consider the payments to decedent as an ‘annuity’ the value of the notes would still not be includible in his gross estate . . . . While the notes were secured by a stock pledge agreement this fact, alone, is insufficient to include the value of the notes in

decedent’s gross estate.”19 It seems that a sale to a trust is somewhat analogous to a sale secured

by the transferred property.

One disturbing development in the jurisprudence on distinguishing debt from

equity is the Tax Court’s analysis of the applicable factors in Estate of Rosen v. Commissioner.20

In Rosen, the decedent contributed substantial marketable securities to a family limited partnership in exchange for 99% of the limited partnership units. Subsequent to the formation of the partnership, the decedent received assets from the partnership that she used to continue her cash gift giving program and for her own support and health care needs. The taxpayer argued that the partnership distributions were loans, not evidence of a retained interest that would cause the partnership assets to be included in the decedent’s estate under § 2036. The Tax Court disagreed, found the payments not to be loans, but rather distributions from the partnership, and further found that because the parties had agreed that such payments would be made, they were evidence of a retained interest.

Unsettling, for purposes of determining how best to structure an installment sale to avoid recharacterization of the debt as a retained interest, is the Tax Court’s application of what it determined to be the relevant factors for purposes of making the debt/equity distinction. Rather than applying the factors previously used by the Tax Court to distinguish a loan from a

gift in Miller v. Commissioner, 21 the Tax Court embarked on an analysis applying the factors

used in the income tax context to distinguish a loan from a capital contribution to an entity to determine whether distributions from the family partnership to the decedent were loans or partnership distributions that constituted evidence of a retained interest in the assets transferred to the partnership. Because the funds were flowing in the opposite direction, out of the partnership, rather than into the partnership, the Court struggled to apply the new factors in a sensible way, and even when those factors would have supported the conclusion that the arrangement was a loan, miraculously concluded the opposite.

The factors that are common to both a gift tax and an income tax analysis are: (1) the existence of a promissory note or other evidence of indebtedness; (2) the presence or absence of a fixed maturity date; (3) the presence of absence of a fixed interest rate and actual

18

74 T.C. 1239 (1980). 19

The court cited Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co., discussed supra at note 5. The IRS has acquiesced only in the result in Moss (1981-2 C.B. 1), indicating a disagreement with at least some part of its reasoning.

20

T.C. Memo. 2006-115, 91 T.C.M. (CCH) 1220. 21

See Miller v. Comm’r., T.C. Memo. 1996-3, 71 T.C.M. (CCH) 1674, aff’d, 113 F.3d 1241 (9th Cir. 1997) (“The mere promise to pay a sum of money in the future accompanied by an implied understanding that such promise would not be enforced is not afforded significance for Federal tax purposes, is not deemed to have value, and does not represent adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth . . . . The determination of whether a transfer was made with a real expectation of repayment and an intention to enforce the debt depends on all the facts and circumstances, including whether: (1) There was a promissory note or other evidence of indebtedness, (2) interest was charged, (3) there was any security or collateral, (4) there was a fixed maturity date, (5) a demand for repayment was made, (6) any actual payment was made, (7) the transferee had the ability to repay, (8) records maintained by the transferor and/or the transferee reflected the transaction as a loan, and (9) the manner in which the transaction was reported for Federal tax purposes is consistent with a loan”). See also Santa Monica Pictures, LLC v. Comm’r, T.C. Memo. 2005-104, 89 T.C.M. (CCH) 1157.

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interest payments; (4) the presence or absence of security; and (5) the borrower’s ability to pay independent of the loan proceeds or the return on the asset acquired with the loan proceeds. Although factor (5) might give one pause in the case of an installment sale to a trust, which may or may not have substantial assets independent of those purchased in the installment sale, it would appear that so long as the trust is solvent from inception, and in fact is able to satisfy the obligation by its terms when payments are due, that the lack of a “sinking fund” or independent assets should not cause the installment obligation to fail as debt, consistent with the cases involving sales in exchange for a private annuity discussed above. Moreover, in Miller, the court’s analysis of the debtor’s ability to repay reveals that a finding of insufficient independent assets to repay the debt was relevant only because the court found that the taxpayer would not have demanded repayment from the assets purchased with the loan proceeds. On the other hand, in an installment sale, the assets purchased by the trust typically expressly secure the debt; thus, the grantor necessarily contemplates repayment with the assets purchased if the trust is otherwise unable to repay the loan. The foregoing is consistent with the income tax cases as well because the income tax cases support a finding of debt if the loan proceeds are used for daily operations

rather than for investment.22 Such use of the loan proceeds would require another source of

funds to repay the debt, a distinguishing factor from an installment sale to a trust.

The court in Rosen ignored the following additional factors held applicable in the gift tax context: (1) whether there was a demand for repayment; (2) whether there was actual repayment; (3) whether the records of the transferor and transferee reflected a loan; and (4) whether the transfers were reported for tax purposes consistent with a loan. These factors certainly seem relevant to the analysis as they demonstrate the intent of the parties, and would show conduct consistent with that intent. Instead, the court in Rosen applied the following additional factors: (1) identity of interest between creditor and equity holders; (2) ability to obtain financing from an outside lender on similar terms; (3) extent to which repayment was subordinated to the claims of outside creditors; (4) the extent to which the loan proceeds were used to acquire capital assets; and (5) adequacy of the capitalization of the enterprise. Although the decedent was the only borrower, and the other partners borrowed nothing, the court, in complete conflict with the analysis in the income tax cases cited by the court, concluded that additional factor (1) indicated the distributions were not loans. With regard to additional factor (3), the court held it was either inapplicable or indicated the distributions were not loans because the loans were unsecured (actually a repetition of common factor (4)). Although the use of the loan proceeds for daily operating expenses weighs in favor of debt in the income tax arena, the court somehow reached the opposite conclusion in Rosen, and held that the decedent’s use of the distributed funds for daily needs weighed against debt or that additional factor (4) was irrelevant. The court held that because an arm’s length lender would not have lent to the decedent on the same terms, additional factor (2) indicated that the distributions were not debt. And the court held that additional factor (5) was irrelevant.

Thus, out of all the additional factors analyzed by the Rosen court, only additional factor (2) (whether the seller could have obtained independent financing on similar terms) would appear at all relevant in the installment sale context, with the potential to weigh against the installment sale obligation constituting bona fide debt. It is interesting that the Rosen court appears to imply that the parties should have agreed to a higher rate of interest to accommodate the fact that the decedent may have been viewed as a high risk creditor. Yet, an increased interest rate would appear to enhance the argument that the debt constituted a retained interest. Suppose for example that the installment obligation bears interest in excess of the

applicable federal rate, the rate approved by the Tax Court in Frazee v. Commissioner23 to avoid

recharacterization of a loan as a gift? The taxpayer would be well advised to obtain independent verification of the rate that an arm’s length lender would require if a rate in excess of the AFR is used. Given the possible risk of recharacterization of the installment obligation as a retained interest in the trust, a structure that avoids the contributor to the entity that is the subject of the installment obligation being the same person as the seller of the entity interest in the installment

22

See, e.g., Roth Steel Tube Co. v. Comm’r, 800 F.2d 625 (6th Cir. 1986); Stinnett’s Pontiac Serv., Inc. v. Comm’r, 730 F.2d 634 (11th Cir. 1984).

23

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sale transaction would appear to be good practice. So, for example, husband could contribute assets to an entity owned by wife, and wife would engage in the installment sale transaction with her grantor trust. Wife could not be said to have retained an interest in the underlying partnership assets, because she did not transfer those assets to the partnership.

More encouraging is the Tax Court case Dallas v. Commissioner,24 involving

two sets of installment sales to trusts for the decedent’s sons. Among the issues in Dallas was the value to two separate self-cancelling installment notes used in the first set of sales in 1999. The author understands that each of the trusts was funded with cash and the proceeds of a third party note representing in the aggregate 10% of the purchase price of the stock sold to the trusts. The balance of the purchase price was funded with an installment note bearing interest at the applicable federal rate. At trial, the only issue concerning the 1999 notes was whether they should be discounted to take account of the self-cancelling feature. The Tax Court held that a discount should be applied; however, the IRS apparently did not otherwise challenge the bona fides of the notes, or argue that the notes constituted a retained interest in the trusts for purposes

of sections 2701 or 2702.25 The IRS did not challenge at all the bona fides of the second set of

notes issued in 2000 which did not have the self-cancelling feature.

In Estate of Lockett v. Commissioner,26 the Tax Court considered whether

transfers from a family limited partnership to family members of the decedent were loans or

gifts. The court relied on factors established in Estate of Maxwell v. Commissioner27 to

determine whether a bona fide debtor-creditor relationship existed. The court held that the determination of whether a transfer was made with a real expectation of repayment and an intention to enforce the debt depends on all the facts and circumstances, including whether: (1) there was a promissory note or other evidence of indebtedness, (2) interest was charged, (3) there was any security or collateral, (4) there was a fixed maturity date, (5) a demand for repayment was made, (6) any actual repayment was made, (7) the transferee had the ability to repay, (8) any records maintained by the transferor and/or transferee reflected the transaction was a loan, and (9) the manner in which the transaction was reported for Federal tax purposes is consistent with a loan.28

In many respects the Lockett factors seem far more sensible in the gift tax context that the Rosen factors. In the case of one of the loans, even though the debtor failed to make payments, no property was given as collateral to secure the note and no maturity date was listed on the note, nor was it clear that the son had the ability to repay, nonetheless the note was respected as a debt and not a gift. The partnership made a demand for payment against the debtor’s estate, and the estate stated it expected to pay the claim in full. In addition, the accountant treated the transaction as a loan, prepared a promissory note, kept an amortization schedule and reported each transaction as a loan. The loan was listed as an asset of the partnership on the decedent’s estate tax return. In the case of another loan to the same son, the failure to execute a promissory note and to keep records consistent with a debt were fatal, and the loan was treated as a gift. In the case of a third loan, although no demand for payment was made, a note was executed and all records were consistent with the transfer being debt; accordingly, the debt was respected.

Although, perhaps, there may be some possibility that the assets in the trust will be included in the grantor’s gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes if the grantor dies while the note received in exchange for the assets sold is still outstanding at the grantor’s death,

24

T.C. Memo. 2006-212, 92 T.C.M. (CCH) 313. 25

Because the taxpayer was living, no argument could have been raised that the taxpayer had retained an interest under § 2036 so as to cause the trust to be included in the grantor's gross estate.

26

T.C. Memo. 2012-123, 103 T.C.M. (CCH) 1671. 27

98 T.C. 594 (1992), aff’d, 3 F.3d 591 (2d Cir. 1993). 28

See also Todd v. Comm’r, T.C. Memo 2011-123, 101 T.C.M. (CCH), aff’d per curiam, 2012 WL 3530259 (5th Cir. 2012).

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that risk, in the judgment of at least some practitioners, is remote. In fact, it seems that any such estate tax inclusion risk may be entirely eliminated if the note is paid in full before the grantor dies. Moreover, it seems the estate tax inclusion risk might be completely eliminated as a practical matter by selling or even giving the note to a trust for the grantor’s spouse that the

grantor has created.29 Hence, the risk of the assets in the trust being included in the gross estate

of the grantor seems considerably lower than with a GRAT.

3. What is the Effect If the Installment Sale Is Not Administered in Accordance with its Terms?

It is at least arguable that the installment sale cannot be so “automatically” treated as “ineffectual” if there is some administration not in accordance with its terms as occurred with respect to the charitable remainder trust in Atkinson. Nevertheless, such “misadministration” of an installment sale might be used as evidence that the note received by the grantor should not be treated as debt for Federal gift tax purposes. That might be true particularly if the note is not paid in accordance with its terms, and is not enforced by the grantor as a valid debt. It might also be true if the terms of the note do not provide for repayment within the grantor’s life expectancy. The authors understand that a condition of obtaining a favorable ruling in PLR 9535026 was that the debt be restructured for repayment within the grantor’s life expectancy.

4. Is Gain Recognized by an Installment Sale of Appreciated Assets?

As indicated, a basic premise of an installment sale to a grantor trust is that the sale will not result in the recognition of gain even if the assets sold are appreciated and the interest accrued or paid on the note received by the grantor will not be included in the grantor’s

gross income for Federal income tax purposes.30 It is therefore critical that the purchasing trust

be treated as a wholly grantor trust for income tax purposes. Grantor trust status may be difficult to secure without risking estate tax inclusion. Although some provisions seem to require the trust be treated as a grantor trust (e.g., the grantor’s spouse is a beneficiary of the trust to whom the trustee may distribute the income and corpus), the court might find that the provisions are illusory (e.g., the spouse is not really intended to be a beneficiary but is mentioned only for purposes of attempting to make the trust a grantor trust). Another possibility is the use of § 675(4)(C). That section provides that if someone acting in a non-fiduciary has the power to “reacquire” the property in the trust by substituting property of equal value, the trust is a grantor trust. The IRS in private letter rulings has held that the determination of whether or not the

person holding the power is acting in a fiduciary capacity is a question of fact.31 In addition, the

IRS has indicated to at least one practitioner involved in a request for ruling that if the power described in § 675(4)(C) is held by the grantor at death, the property may be included in the

grantor’s gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes.32 Other possibilities to obtain grantor trust

29

The trust the grantor creates for his or her spouse may be a grantor trust with respect to the grantor, preventing any gain recognition by reason of the transfer of the note. Even the sale of the note to the grantor’s spouse likely would not, on account of § 1041, result in gain recognition.

30

Compare D. Dunn & D. Handler, “Tax Consequences of Outstanding Trust Liabilities When Grantor Trust Status Terminates,” 95 J. Tax’n 49 (2001) (gain will be recognized at the death of the grantor if the note received in the installment sale of appreciated property is outstanding at death) with J. Blattmachr, M. Gans & H. Jacobson, “Income Tax Effects of Termination of Grantor Trust Status by Reason of the Grantor’s Death,” 97 J. Tax’n 149 (Sept. 2002) (gain will not be recognized at the death of the grantor if the note received in the installment sale of appreciated property is outstanding at death). See also Aucutt, “Installment Sales to Grantor Trusts,” 4 No. 2 Business Entities 28 (Mar/Apr 2002); E. Manning & J. Hesch “Deferred Payment Sales to Grantor Trusts, GRATs and Net Gifts: Income and Transfer Tax Elements,” 24 Tax Mgm’t Est., Gifts & Tr. J. 3 (1999).

31

See, e.g., PLR 9126015. 32

In Estate of Jordahl v. Comm’r, 65 T.C. 92, acq., 1977-1 C.B. 1, the Tax Court held that a power of substitution held by the grantor would not cause the trust assets to be included in the grantor’s estate for Federal estate tax purposes. The IRS, in several private rulings, has cited Jordahl as authority for the conclusion that the assets held in

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status are the power to add to the class of beneficiaries, the power to lend to the grantor with or without adequate security and the use of related and subordinate trustees with broad discretionary distribution powers. Each of these may be viewed as creating some risk of estate tax inclusion, and may also run the risk of failing to confer grantor trust status if they are determined to be illusory powers because their exercise is inhibited by conflicting fiduciary duties.

5. Protecting an Installment Sale with a Formula Clause33

King v. Commissioner34 represents an early taxpayer victory in the sale context. Taxpayer made an installment sale of stock of a closely held corporation to trusts created for his children. The purchase agreements provided for a retroactive adjustment to the purchase price ($1.25 per share).

 Trigger: determination of fair market value of the stock by IRS that is greater or less than stated price.

 Adjustment: adjustment of purchase price, up or down, to value determined by IRS.

IRS determined the value of the stock to be $16 per share and imposed tax on the excess over $1.25. The court held that the savings clause was effective to insulate the transaction from gift tax.

The Court rejected the government’s argument, based on the holding in Procter 30 years earlier, that the adjustment clause violated public policy because there was no attempt to rescind the transfer if it was determined to be a taxable gift. This view of the scope of the public policy holding in Procter is in accord with the view of the Tax Court, albeit in dicta, in a case involving the efficacy of a savings clause in determining the amount of the estate tax marital deduction: “In Procter, application of the savings clause would nullify the whole

transaction and the Court would have nothing to decide.”35

Also notable is the Court’s reasoning that the adjustment clause did not violate public policy because it would not have the effect of diminishing taxpayer’s estate, thereby

escaping death tax.36 And in practice is does seem that the IRS is satisfied with a purchase price

adjustment in the case of a pure intra-family sale that would increase the value of the taxable estate, and appears to prefer that result, at least in the case of an estate tax challenge, to assessing gift tax, the computation of which would be tax exclusive and would produce an offsetting deduction. The Tenth Circuit in King concurred with the District Court’s findings of fact that there was an absence of donative intent evidenced by the existence of the valuation clause and that the parties intended that the trusts pay full and adequate consideration. The transaction was found to have been made in the ordinary course of business and thereby was excepted from gift tax by Reg. § 25.2512-8.

a trust over which the grantor holds a power described in § 675(4)(C) are not included in the grantor’s gross estate. Not analyzed in the subsequent rulings is the fact that the power held in Jordahl was held in a fiduciary capacity— under § 675(4)(C), to obtain grantor trust status, the power must be held in a non-fiduciary capacity.

33

Excerpted from D. Zeydel & N. Benford, “A Walk Through the Authorities on Formula Clauses,” 37 Est. Plan. 3, (Dec. 2010).

34

King v. United States, 545 F.2d 700 (10th Cir. 1976). 35

Estate of Alexander v. Comm’r, 82 T.C. 34 (1984), at 45, n. 11. 36

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6. Purchase Price Adjustment Fails

In McLendon,37 the taxpayer, a famous Texas broadcaster, entered into a

private annuity agreement with his son and the trustee of trusts for his daughters. Under the agreement, which contained a tax savings clause, the son and trustee, as obligors, agreed to purchase a remainder interest in certain of taxpayer’s assets, including two general partnership interests.

 Trigger: changes in the value assigned to the elements of the transaction by the agreement resulting from a settlement with IRS or a final decision of the Tax Court.

 Adjustment: up or down, in the purchase price for the remainder interest and the annuity payments, plus 10% interest on any adjustment, based on any change in valuation.

The Tax Court found that the parties understated the value of the assets in which the remainder interest was sold and held the savings clause ineffective to avoid gift tax. The court distinguished King because of the specific findings in that case of an arm’s length transaction, free of donative intent, and repeated the prior reservations expressed by the Tax Court in Harwood as to the accuracy of those findings. The court chose instead to apply the public policy notions in Procter and Ward (notwithstanding they both involved gifts rather than a sale), noting that, if the clause was effective, its determination that a gift was made would render that issue moot and there would be no assurance that the obligors, who were not parties to the litigation, would respect the terms of the savings clause and pay the additional consideration required.

7. Defined Value Sale Succeeds

King was for many years the lone taxpayer victory and consistently distinguished based upon the specific finding of fact that the parties intended an arms length transaction. But recently, taxpayers achieved another victory in the sale context in the Petter

case.38 Anne Petter’s uncle was one of the first investors in what became United Parcel Service

of America, Inc. (UPS). UPS was privately owned for most of its existence, and its stock was mostly passed within the families of its employees. Anne inherited her stock in 1982. Anne formed Petter Family LLC with two of her children and contributed stock worth $22,633,545 to the LLC. She received three classes of membership units, Class A, Class D and Class T. Anne became the manager of Class A and her daughter Donna became the manager of Class D and son Terry became the manager of Class T. The LLC was managed by majority vote of the managers, but no vote could pass without the approval of the manager of Class A units. A majority vote within each Class of members permitted that Class to name its manager. Transfers outside the Petter family required manager approval, and a transferee took an Assignee interest.

Anne created two grantor trusts which apparently were grantor solely by reason of the power to purchase a life insurance policy on Anne’s life within the meaning of § 677(a)(3). Donna was the trustee of her trust, and Terry was the trustee of his trust. In a two-part transaction, on March 22, 2002, Anne gave each trust units intended to make up 10% of the trusts’ assets and then, on March 25, she sold units worth 90% of the trusts’ assets. As part of the transfers, Anne also gave units to two public charities that were community foundations offering donor advised funds.

 Trigger: formula gift to divide units between the trust and the charities to avoid gift tax essentially as follows:

1.1.1 assigns to the Trust as a gift the number of units described in Recital C above that equals one-half the maximum dollar amount that can pass free of federal gift tax by reason of the Transferor’s applicable exclusion amount allowed by Code section 2010(c); and

37

Estate of McLendon v. Comm’r, T.C. Memo. 1993-459, rev’d on other grounds, 77 F.3d 477 (5th Cir. 1995), on remand to, T.C. Memo. 1996-307, 72 T.C.M. (CCH) 42, judgment rev’d by, 135 F.3d 1017 (5th Cir. 1998).

38

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1.1.2 assigns to the charity as a gift the difference between the total number of units described in Recital C above and the number of units assigned to the trust under the preceding section.

 Adjustment: Trust agrees that if the value of the units is finally determined for federal gift tax purposes to exceed the amount described in section 1.1.1, the trustee will on behalf of the trust transfer the excess units to the charity as soon as is practicable. Charity similarly agreed to return excess units to the trust.

Anne also engaged in a defined value sale. Recital C of the sale documents read “Transferor wished to assign 8,459 Class [D or T] membership units in the company (the “Units”) including all of the Transferor’s right, title and interest in the economic, management and voting right in the Units by sale to the trust and as a gift to the [charity].”

 Trigger: formula sale to divide units between the trust and the charities essentially as follows:

1.1.1 assigns and sells to the Trust the number of units described in Recital C above that equals $4,085,190 as finally determined for federal gift tax purposes; and

1.1.2 assigns to the charity as a gift the difference between the total number of units described in Recital C above and the number of units assigned and sold to the trust under the preceding section.

 Adjustment: Trust agrees that if the value of the units is finally determined to exceed the $4,085,190, the trustee will on behalf of the trust and as a condition of the sale to it, transfer the excess units to the charity as soon as is practicable. Charity similarly agreed to return excess units to the trust.

The trustees of the trusts executed installment notes and signed pledge agreements giving Anne a security interest in the LLC shares transferred. The pledge agreements specified:

It is the understanding of the Pledgor and the Security Party [sic] that the fair market value of the Pledged Units is equal to the amount of the loan – i.e., $4,085,190. If this net fair market value has been incorrectly determined, then within a reasonable period after the fair market value is finally determined for federal gift tax purpose, the number of Pledged Units will be adjusted so as to equal the value of the loan as so determined.

The IRS and the taxpayer agreed that the trusts made regular quarterly payments on the loans since July 2002. The trusts were able to make payments because the LLC paid quarterly distributions to all members, crafted so the amounts paid to the trusts covered their quarterly payment obligations.

Good Facts. Charities were represented by outside counsel. They conducted arm’s length negotiations, won changes to the transfer documents and were successful in insisting on becoming substituted members with the same voting rights as other members. Formal letters were sent to the charities describing the gifts and the formula was reflected in all correspondence. The deal was done based upon the attorney’s estimates of value using a 40% discount, then a well known appraisal firm was hired to prepare a formal appraisal. Anne hid nothing on her gift tax return and even attached a disclosure statement that included the formula clauses in the transfer documents and a spreadsheet showing the allocations of units, the organizational documents, trust agreements, transfer documents, letters of intent sent to the charities, the appraisal report, annual statements of account for UPS, and Forms 8283 reflecting Noncash charitable contributions.

Public Policy Victory. Court states “We have no doubt that behind these complex transactions lay Anne’s simple intent to pass on as much as she could to her children and grandchildren without having to pay gift tax, and to give the rest to charities in her community.” “The distinction is between a donor who gives away a fixed set of rights with

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uncertain value – that’s Christiansen39 – and a donor who tries to take property back – that’s

Procter.40 A shorthand distinction is that savings clauses are void, but formula clauses are fine.” Anne did not give away a specific number of shares, but an ascertainable dollar value of stock. The managers of the LLC owed fiduciary obligations to the charities to avoid shady dealings by the trusts and there would be fewer disincentives to sue the trusts, versus the donor herself, for an adjustment. In addition, a number of sections of the Code expressly sanction formula clauses.

The court agreed that the assignment was not of an open ended amount, but of a fraction of certain dollar value, to be evaluated at the time she made them. The court further agreed that the gifts to charity occurred on the date of transfer, not on the date the need for readjustment or the actual readjustment occurred. Accordingly Anne was entitled to a charitable deduction as of that date.

8. Defined Value Gift Succeeds

In Wandry v. Commissioner,41 Joanne and Albert Wandry formed Norseman

Capital, LLC, a Colorado limited liability company with their children to engage in business. It appears the assets of Norseman consisted primarily of cash and marketable securities. The Wandrys made gifts of fixed dollar amounts of the Units to their children and grandchildren as annual exclusion gifts and gifts using their unified credit. The assignments and memorandums of gift set forth the intent to make defined value gifts equal to a sufficient number of units so that the fair market value of the Units for federal gift tax purposes would be a stated dollar amount.

 Trigger: IRS challenge to the valuation and a final determination of different value by the IRS or a court.

 Adjustment: number of gifted Units adjusted to equal the value gifted as follows:

Although the number of Units gifted is fixed on the date of the gift, that number is based on the fair market value of the gifted Units, which cannot be known on the date of the gift but must be determined after such date based on all relevant information as of that date. Furthermore, the value determined is subject to challenge by the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”). I intend to have a good-faith determination of such value made by an independent third-party professional experienced in such matters and appropriately qualified to make such a determination. Nevertheless, if, after the number of gifted Units is determined based on such valuation, the IRS challenges such valuation and a final determination of a different value is made by the IRS or a court of law, the number of gifted Units shall be adjusted accordingly so that the value of the number of Units gifted to each person equals the amount set forth above, in the same manner as a federal estate tax formula marital deduction amount would be adjusted for a valuation redetermination by the IRS and/or a court of law.

The IRS advanced three arguments. first that the description of the gift on the gift tax returns setting forth a specific number of Units constituted an admission by the taxpayers to a gift of specified numbers of Units, rather than defined value gifts; second, that the capital accounts controlled the nature of the gifts; and third, that the gift documents themselves transferred a fixed percentage. Last the government argued a violation of public policy under Procter. The Tax Court found that the totality of the gift tax returns evidenced an intent to make defined value gifts, notwithstanding the gift descriptions, and that the capital accounts were not controlling but were tentative. The court addressed the Procter challenge by analogizing the gifts to the transfers in Petter, stating that so long as the amount of Units gifted can be computed by mathematical formula once the value of the Units is known, the formula was effective to define the amount the gifts. The court also found it inconsequential that the formula reallocated

39

Estate of Christiansen v. Comm’r, 130 T.C. 1 (2008), aff’d, 586 F.3d 1061 (8th Cir. 2009). 40

Comm’r v. Procter, 142 F.2d 824 (4th Cir. 1944), cert. denied, 323 U.S. 756 (1944). 41

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Units between the donors and the donees, rather that between the family member donees and charity, as in Petter. Some experts have suggested that perhaps the gift instrument should confer a right on the donees to participate in the reporting of the gift so that the donees have the ability to enforce their right to receive the formula amount, in the same way that a formula allocation gift allows the donees to enforce their rights to receive the proper percentage among themselves.

B. Is it Possible to Make the Installment Sale to Trust Created by the Spouse?42 One possible way to avoid the possibility that a taxable gift has occurred when making an installment sale to a trust would be to make the sale to a trust created by the seller’s spouse in which the seller has sufficient beneficial interests so that any gift by the seller to the trust is treated as an incomplete gift, and therefore not subject to gift tax. To ensure an incomplete gift, it would seem prudent, if the husband will be the sellor and the wife will be the settlor of the purchasing trust, to make the husband a discretionary beneficiary of income and principal with the power to veto distributions to any other discretionary beneficiary and also to

grant to the husband a testamentary special power of appointment.43 An additional question

raised when the sale is not made to the sellor’s own grantor trust is what would be the effect of the transaction if grantor trust status terminates while the note remains outstanding.

Facts: Suppose husband sells property to a grantor trust of which the husband is a beneficiary created by his wife in exchange for a promissory note issued by the wife’s grantor trust. Prior to the wife’s death, no payments of principal are made under the note. The wife dies thus terminating the status of the trust as a grantor trust while the promissory note remains outstanding and is held by the husband.

1. Basis of the Promissory Note Held By Wife’s Grantor Trust

In general, a taxpayer’s basis in property is determined based on how the

property was acquired.44 In the case of a promissory note issued by a taxpayer, the position of

the IRS is that the taxpayer’s basis in a "self-made" promissory note is $0 until payment under the note is made.45

In Peracchi v. Commissioner,46 however, the court held that for purposes of

calculating whether liabilities exceeded basis in an § 351 transaction, triggering gain under § 357(c), the contributing shareholder was treated as having a basis in his own note contributed to the corporation equal to the face amount of the note. Although the court emphasized that it limited its holding to the case of a note contributed to a C corporation, it did so to distinguish the case of a contribution to a partnership, which could enable a taxpayer to deduct pass-through losses attributable to nonrecourse debt, i.e., the case of a tax shelter. Several aspects of the court’s analysis might apply. For example, if the transferee of a note took the zero basis of the obligor on the note, the transferee would recognize gain on a sale of the note in an amount equal to the full amount of the sales proceeds, which “can’t be the right result.” Second, even if the transferor controls the transferee, which would not be the case on the facts, the issuance of the note has real economic consequences for the obligor on the note if creditors of the transferee might require payment of the note, for example, in a bankruptcy proceeding of the transferee,

42

Carlyn McCaffrey discussed this idea in one of her Heckerling Institute presentations, although it was not mentioned in the written materials. The author wishes to thank Elizabeth Glasgow, Yoram Keinan and Charles Stiver for their contributions to the analysis in this and the following section of this outline.

43

See D. Zeydel, “When is a Gift to a Trust Complete -- Did CCA 201208026 Get It Right?,” J. Tax’n, (forthcoming Sept. 2012).

44

See generally IRC §§ 1001; 1014; 1015; 1041. 45

See Gemini Twin Fund III v. Comm’r, T.C. Memo. 1991-315, 62 T.C.M. (CCH) 104, aff’d, 8 F.3d 26 (9th Cir. 1993) (“Even assuming . . . that a note is property under state law and for other purposes, a taxpayer has no adjusted basis in his or her own note. Until the note is paid, it is only a contractual obligation . . . .”); see also Raynor v. Comm’r, 50 T.C. 762 (1968).

46

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assuming bankruptcy is not a remote possibility. Finally, the same end result could be achieved if the obligor on the note issued the note to a bank in exchange for cash, transferred the cash instead of the note, and the transferee purchased the note from the bank. The cash clearly would have had basis, and the only difference in the transaction would be the avoidance of the transaction costs with the bank. The court’s analysis in Peracchi, therefore, constitutes at least some support for the position that a note issued from a trust could have basis in the hands of the transferor.

Lessinger v. Commissioner,47 involved the same issue as Peracchi of liabilities in excess of basis under § 357(c) and a promissory note issued by the shareholder/transferor to the corporation/transferee. The court states that the concept of basis refers to assets and not liabilities and that therefore the corporation/transferee could have a basis in the promissory note even if the shareholder does not. The court found that to be the case on the facts before it. The transferee would have a cost associated with the shareholder/transferor’s note because it took assets with liabilities in excess of basis and because it would have to recognize income on payment of the note if it had no basis in the note. As in Peracchi, the court noted that the shareholder/transferor could have borrowed cash from a bank and transferred the cash to the corporation/transferee, which could have purchased the shareholder/transferor’s note from the bank. The court concluded there was no reason to recognize gain when assets are transferred to a controlled corporation and the transferor undertakes a genuine personal liability for a promissory note issued to the corporation for an amount equal to the excess liabilities. The court’s reliance on the fact that the transferee should not have to recognize full gain on a disposition of the note, and on the fact there would be no zero basis problem if an equivalent alternative transaction were undertaken, could also apply in the context of a trust issuing debt to purchase an asset so that the holder of the note issued by a trust could have basis in the note even if the trust does not have basis in the note.

2. Basis of the Promissory Note Held by Husband After Sale of Property Notwithstanding the foregoing analysis, in any lifetime transfer of property between a husband and wife, whether a gift or an arm’s length sale transaction, the basis of the property transferred is determined under § 1041. Pursuant to § 1041(b), the transfer for income tax purposes is treated as a gift, regardless of the parties’ intent to engage in a sale, and the basis of the property transferred in the hands of the transferee is the adjusted basis of the transferor. In addition, for the purposes of the deemed gift and transferee basis rules for transfers between spouses, the use of a grantor trust in the transaction will not avoid the application of § 1041(b) because the grantor trust is disregarded as to the grantor under Revenue Ruling 85-13. Accordingly, if a transfer of a “self-made” promissory note occurs between a husband and a wife’s grantor trust, the IRS’s position will be that the husband’s basis in the promissory note will be $0, unless payments under the note have been made.

3. Rules for Gain Recognition of a Promissory Note under Section 1001 Except as otherwise provided in the income tax provisions, a taxpayer recognizes gain or loss upon the sale or other disposition of property. Regulation § 1.1001-1(a) provides that gain or loss is realized from a disposition of property within the meaning of § 1001 if the property is exchanged for other property differing materially either in kind or in extent. A debt instrument, such as a promissory note, differs materially in kind or in extent if it has

undergone a “significant modification.”48 In essence, a significant modification of a debt

instrument results in a “new” debt instrument that is deemed to be exchanged for the original

unmodified debt instrument.49

47 872 F.2d 519 (2d Cir. 1989). 48 Reg. § 1.1001-3(b). 49 See PLR 200315002.

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4. Significant Modification Occurs if Promissory Note Has New Obligor Regulation § 1.1001-3 provides rules for determining whether a change in the legal rights or obligations of a debt instrument is a “significant modification” so as to be treated as an exchange triggering gain or loss realization, including rules for when a change in obligor is a significant modification. The substitution of a new obligor on a nonrecourse debt instrument, without more, is not a significant modification to trigger a gain realizing exchange under §

1001.50 Therefore, the optimal solution to putting the structure in place would be to use a

nonrecourse obligation. If that is done, it might be wise to introduce guarantees in order to ensure the bona fides of the debt. The presence of guarantees should not defeat treatment of the obligation as nonrecourse.

Generally, the substitution of a new obligor on a recourse debt instrument is a

significant modification.51 There does not appear to be any direct authority that the death of an

individual obligor, and the resulting transfer to the individual obligor’s estate would constitute a substitution of a new obligor on the promissory note for the purposes of Regulation § 1.1001-3(e)(4). Similarly, there appears to be no direct authority that a trust, characterized for income tax purposes initially as a grantor trust during the grantor’s lifetime and then as a non-grantor trust upon the grantor’s death, would constitute two distinct entities such that the non-grantor trust would be treated as a “new obligor” on the self-made promissory note issued by the trust.

5. Significant Modification Exception – Substantially Transferring All Assets

The unresolved question of whether the single trust’s change in status for income tax purposes from a grantor trust to a non-grantor trust upon the wife’s death would constitute a “new obligor” may be avoided if the change in the trust’s status is regarded as a transaction to which an exception to the “new obligor” rule applies.

Regulation § 1.1001-3(e)(4)(i)(C) states that the substitution of a new obligor on a recourse debt instrument is not a significant modification if (i) the new obligor acquires substantially all of the assets of the original obligor, (ii) the transaction does not result in a change in payment expectations (defined in Regulation § 1.1001-3(e)(4)(iii) as a substantial enhancement or impairment of the obligor's capacity to meet its payment obligations) and (iii) the transaction does not result in a significant alteration (defined in Regulation § 1.1001-3(e)(4)(i)(E) as an alternation that would be a significant modification but for the fact that the alteration occurs by operation of the terms of the instrument). This exception is rarely used, but the IRS has held that these three conditions were satisfied and the exception applied in a corporate restructuring under which the transferor corporation transferred its three primary businesses, the liabilities for two of its three business and all of the promissory notes at issue to a subsidiary.52

This “substantially all assets” exception has not been applied in the context of trusts; however, there is an argument that upon the wife's death, the resulting non-grantor trust has acquired substantially all of the assets and liabilities (including the note) of the wife’s grantor

trust.53 This argument is weakened by the lack of any actual transfer between two distinct

entities, as occurred in PLR 9711024. The argument that this exception should apply would be strengthened by increasing the similarity to PLR 9711024. This might be achieved if under the terms of the trust agreement upon the death of the wife the original grantor trust were to terminate and pour its assets and liabilities into a new non-grantor trust with slightly different terms (rather than allowing the original trust to continue as a non-grantor trust upon the wife’s death). Although this proposal under which a new trust is created would have the benefit of

50 Reg. § 1.1001-3(e)(4)(ii). 51 Reg. § 1.1001-3(e)(4). 52 See PLR 9711024. 53

Under stated assumption three, we have assumed that no other conditions have changed that would cause the exception to fail due to a change in payment expectations or a significant alteration.

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increasing the likelihood that the “substantially all” exception would apply, by adding a new distinct entity to the scenario it would also increase the likelihood that the general rule that a gain realization event is triggered upon the substitution of a new obligor of the note would also apply.

6. Significant Modification Exception – State Law

In contrast, a separate argument exists that relies on the continuation of the original trust. An alternative argument to avoid the application of the substantial modification rules based on the substitution of a new obligor could be made based on the IRS’s holding in PLR 200315002.

In PLR 200315002, the IRS held that no substitution of obligors had occurred when, pursuant to the applicable state law, a corporation converted into a domestic limited liability company. The IRS relied on the fact that, under the applicable state law, “the conversion of any other entity into a domestic limited liability company shall not be deemed to affect any obligations or liabilities of the other entity incurred prior to its conversion to a domestic limited liability company . . . and for all purposes of [state] law, all rights of creditors and all liens upon any property of the other entity that has converted shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts, liabilities and duties of the other entity that has converted shall thenceforth attach to the domestic limited liability company and may be enforced against it to the

same extent as if said debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or contracted by it.”54 The

IRS reached its conclusion regardless of the fact that the new domestic limited liability company was a single member limited liability company and a disregarded entity in relation to another corporation. The IRS concluded that applying Reg. § 1.1001-3 requires a corresponding application of state law and under the applicable state law the rights of the holder of debt instruments issued by the obligor did not change and therefore the obligors did not change for the purposes of determining if a significant modification had occurred.

Assuming the applicable state law governing the wife’s grantor trust would treat the single trust obligor that undergoes a change in grantor trust status for income tax purposes upon the wife’s death as the same legal entity as the grantor trust, subject to the same debts, liabilities and duties, an argument could be made that no change in obligor has occurred within the meaning of Reg. § 1.1001-3(e)(4), even though the issuing grantor trust was a disregarded entity.

7. Analogous Argument For No Gain Realization Based on Installment Sale Rules

Further support for an argument that no gain should be recognized upon the obligor trust’s change in status from grantor trust to non-grantor trust is found in the installment sale rules of § 453. An installment sale is a disposition of property where at least one payment is

to be received after the close of the taxable year in which the disposition occurs.55 The

transaction between the husband and the wife’s grantor trust would qualify as an installment

sale,56 but for the application of § 1041(b), which requires that a transfer between a husband and

wife (or, in this case, the wife’s grantor trust) be treated as a gift for income tax purposes.57

Although the installment sale rules will not apply in this scenario the income tax consequences of the transaction if § 1041 did not apply remain persuasive.

54 PLR 200315002. 55 IRC § 453(b)(1). 56

In concluding that installment sale treatment would apply if § 1041(b) did not apply, we assume that the property sold by the husband to the wife’s grantor trust is not depreciable property that would prevent the application of the installment sale method under section 453(g), which excludes the sale of depreciable property to a controlled entity, which includes a trust of which the seller is a beneficiary.

57

There appears to be no authority that expressly prohibits the application of the installment sale rules to a transfer of property between husband and wife due to the application of § 1041; however, it seems that the Service’s position is that § 1041 trumps other income tax provisions.

References

Related documents

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